Home arrow The SuperFoods arrow Low Fat Yogurt arrow Live Active Cultures

Live Active Cultures

Print E-mail

Table of Contents
Before we explore yogurt’s extraordinary abilities, it’s important to understand that in order to be effectively health-promoting, the yogurt you buy must contain live active cultures. Yogurt is, quite simply, milk that has been curdled. To make yogurt, pasteurized, homogenized milk is inoculated with bacteria cultures and kept warm in an incubator where the lactose or milk sugar turns into lactic acid. This thickens the yogurt and gives it its characteristic tart, tangy flavor. The process is very similar to that used when making beer, wine, or cheese, in that beneficial organisms ferment and transform the basic food.

This is the basic process for producing yogurt, but there’s a wide range of techniques adopted by manufacturers of differing brands. For example, some manufacturers pasteurize the yogurt after culturing it. In this case, the label will indicate “heat treated after culturing.” This process kills all the friendly bacteria and, while it may taste good, its health benefits will not extend to those provided by live active cultures. You might be surprised to learn that some frozen yogurts have live active cultures. Check the labels; with live active cultures, frozen yogurt offers a low-fat advantage over ice cream.

There are three basic types of yogurt, depending on the milk used to make it: regular yogurt, low-fat yogurt, and nonfat yogurt. Yogurt made from whole milk has at least 3.25 percent milk fat. Low-fat yogurt is made from low-fat milk or part-skim milk and has between 0.5 and 2 percent milk fat. Nonfat yogurt is made from skim milk and contains less than 0.5 percent milk fat.
 
Tag it:
Delicious
Furl it!
Digg
Technorati
Reddit
YahooMyWeb
Home | About Us | Contact Us | Privacy Policy
Copyright © 2007-2008 SuperFoods Partners LLC. / Broadspring Inc.